ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — An Alaska serial killer buried three victims in the state of Washington and submerged two others in a lake there but refused to provide many more details about their whereabouts, according to interviews released Tuesday by the FBI.

The FBI posted more than six hours of videotaped interviews on the Internet that agents, Anchorage police and federal prosecutors conducted with Israel Keyes in the months before his suicide in an Anchorage jail.

The material shows Keyes’ movements across the country before his arrest in Texas on March 13, 2012. However, investigators have had leads run dry on a number of other victims and are seeking the public’s help.

Keyes lived in Washington state before moving to Anchorage in 2007.

In a Nov. 26 interview, just days before his suicide, Keyes asked if investigators had found any knives at his New York property or on a boat he owned in Washington state. He said there were two knives missing from his girlfriend’s home in Anchorage, and he didn’t know where they were.

He was particularly concerned about a Cold Steel Tanto, 4 1/2-inch folding knife he bought in Port Angeles, Wash. Asked by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin Feldis why the knife was important, Keyes indicated authorities might find something if they took it apart.

He said, “yeah,” when asked if the knife was associated with one of the Washington killings.

FBI Special Agent Jolene Goeden probed deeper, asking if a body were found at the bottom of a lake, would it still be intact.

“Were they contained in something or were they just tied to the milk jugs?” she asked.

“No,” he responded.

She pressed, “I mean, is it something where we, we might possible actually still get an intact …”

“No,” Keyes repeated, cutting her off.

He later indicated the folding blade wasn’t the primary means of death.

Asked if the victims were shot or strangled, Keyes replied after chuckling, “You’ll get the whole story eventually.”

He then relented and said the only victim shot was Bill Currier in Vermont. All others were strangled except one Washington victim, who was hit in the head and killed as Keyes tried to subdue him.

Feldis and another assistant U.S. attorney, Frank Russo, decided in the taped interview that the Washington state couple were buried in a hole and not submerged in the lake.

Keyes says, “Yeah, that was a while ago.”

Keyes worked for the Makah Indian tribe in Washington state after he got out of the Army in July 2001.

“It wasn’t that long that you, um, killed somebody and it was that sort of feeling that you needed … ” Feldis said.

“Yeah, Neah Bay’s a boring town,” Keyes replied.

Later, the questioning turned to the bodies in the lake, and Keyes seemingly chastised his interrogators about not figuring out one of the locations.

“You guys know about Lake Crescent in Washington, right?” he said.

Feldis asked, “And that’s the lake?”

“That’s one of the lakes,” Keyes replied.

Keyes indicated he weighed the body or bodies down with four to five milk jugs.

“Just for one body,” Feldis asked.

“Yeah,” Keyes said.

The FBI believes one victim was killed in Neah Bay shortly after Keyes was released from the Army. The other two people buried in Washington state are believed to have been killed from July 2001 to 2005. The other two victims in the state were believed to have been killed in 2005 or 2006.

After his arrests in 2012, Keyes was charged with the murder of 17-year-old Samantha Koenig, an Anchorage barista who was kidnapped from the coffee stand where she worked. Her dismembered body was pulled from a lake north of Anchorage two months after she went missing.

Keyes later confessed to the 2011 murders of Bill and Lorraine Currier of Essex, Vt., and indicated to authorities there were victims in a total of 10 states.

Keyes never disclosed much information about the other crimes, trying to keep as many details as possible out of the media so his daughter wouldn’t be able to find any information up on the Internet or his mother wouldn’t have a heart attack reading what he did.

He also was in constant negotiations with investigators, oftentimes frustrating them on not releasing information as he said he would.

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